Non-progressive coalitions for November 19th runoff

Political parties, expected to run in the run-off for local elections on November 19th, have begun holding meetings and talks on the possibility of connecting coalitions. Political party leaders say there is still nothing concrete about coalitions except meetings of political officials at the local level. But political connoisseurs think [...]
Political parties, expected to run in the run-off for local elections on November 19th, have begun holding meetings and talks on the possibility of connecting coalitions.
Political party leaders say there is still nothing concrete about coalitions except meetings of political officials at the local level.
However, connoisseurs of political issues feel that any political agreement that can be reached between the political parties for the runoff cannot be natural until, at both the central and local level, political subjects are divided.
The recogniser of political issues, Mazum Baraliu, said political parties can make the coalitions on issues of political interest and the extent of influence.
The political parties as far as they can, often even contrary to the will and orientation of the citizen to give someone a vote, make coalitions with anyone and make them for the political interests of the subject and for political power. This often displeases a certain aspect of the electorate and should be taken with reservations that these coalitions could not always express the will of the citizen”, Baraliu says.
There is interest in politics and each political party, Baraliu adds, tries to have as much power as possible so that even the influence of that subject is greater.
Even formally and informally, even among those subjects who accuse each other at the central level and at the local level for their mistakes, the interest already pushes them for coalitions and gain the executive mandate in one municipality or another”, Baraliu points out.












